| Corrections and clarifications
An article in the Business section Sunday about Harley-Davidson motorcycles misstated the number of cycles the company shipped in 2006. The number was 349,196, not nearly 4.6 million. *** An article Friday in the Weekend Cue section about a Joe Jackson concert April 21 at the Pabst Theater misstated when tickets will go on sale. Tickets go on sale at noon on Friday, Jan. 18, not Friday, Jan 11. The theater provided incorrect information. 1/8/08 A recipe Sunday in the Entrée section for Muskego Lakes Country Club Greenbriar Stuffed Chicken misstated the amount of diced onion to be used. The recipe calls for 1/8 of a cup of finely diced yellow onion, not 8 cups. *** An Associated Press article Jan. 1 about the release from prison of Sara Jane Moore, who attempted to kill President Ford in 1975, incorrectly stated that she was involved with the Symbionese Liberation Army.
A Novel Near-Infrared Spectroscopy System to Characterize Coronary ...
BURLINGTON, Mass., Oct. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- The live case demonstrations at TCT 2007 will for the first time feature the use of a novel NIR imaging system recently developed by InfraReDx, Inc., a privately-held medical device company. The Company is also sponsoring a Breakfast Symposium to provide additional information about this new device to the cardiology community. The investigational technology will also be demonstrated at Booth #6013 in the Emerging Technologies arena and in the new, "Cath Lab of the Future" located in the center of the TCT Exhibit Hall. Additionally, the Company will sponsor several investigator presentations on the detection of lipid-rich coronary plaque using near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy technology. Breakfast Symposium with Dr. James A.
Getting Enough Sleep Will Help Raise Your Exam Scores - AASM To Teens
With the academic year at the half-way mark, millions of high school students are preparing to take their mid-term exams. Unfortunately, research is increasingly showing that more and more teens are not getting enough sleep, which can have a negative impact on their grades. Teens are no longer adhering to "lights out". Among the reasons for these changes in sleeping patterns are increased part-time working hours, talking on the cell phone, computer usage and watching television at bedtime. According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM), success on exams in the classroom is tied to sleep. William Kohler, MD, medical director of the Florida Sleep Institute, director of pediatric sleep services at University Community Hospital in Tampa, and an AASM pediatric sleep expert, says that teens need more sleep than adults because their circadian rhythm is easily disrupted.
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